WO2010093296A1 - Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node - Google Patents

Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2010093296A1
WO2010093296A1 PCT/SE2009/050156 SE2009050156W WO2010093296A1 WO 2010093296 A1 WO2010093296 A1 WO 2010093296A1 SE 2009050156 W SE2009050156 W SE 2009050156W WO 2010093296 A1 WO2010093296 A1 WO 2010093296A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
cell
transmission
served
active terminals
information
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/SE2009/050156
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Pål FRENGER
Bo Hagerman
Bengt Lindoff
Stefan Parkvall
Original Assignee
Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ)
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority to HUE09788488A priority Critical patent/HUE033078T2/en
Priority to US13/148,200 priority patent/US9408161B2/en
Priority to PCT/SE2009/050156 priority patent/WO2010093296A1/en
Priority to EP17165037.7A priority patent/EP3206443B1/en
Priority to DK17165037T priority patent/DK3206443T3/en
Priority to EP09788488.6A priority patent/EP2397006B1/en
Priority to JP2011550088A priority patent/JP5603885B2/en
Priority to RU2011137533/07A priority patent/RU2535785C2/en
Application filed by Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) filed Critical Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ)
Priority to PL17165037T priority patent/PL3206443T3/en
Priority to ES09788488.6T priority patent/ES2637012T3/en
Priority to ES17165037T priority patent/ES2759599T3/en
Priority to EP19188081.4A priority patent/EP3609246B1/en
Publication of WO2010093296A1 publication Critical patent/WO2010093296A1/en
Priority to US14/700,460 priority patent/US9730166B2/en
Priority to US15/629,010 priority patent/US10588091B2/en
Priority to US16/750,228 priority patent/US11265823B2/en
Priority to US17/667,687 priority patent/US11696238B2/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/04TPC
    • H04W52/18TPC being performed according to specific parameters
    • H04W52/28TPC being performed according to specific parameters using user profile, e.g. mobile speed, priority or network state, e.g. standby, idle or non transmission
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L65/00Network arrangements, protocols or services for supporting real-time applications in data packet communication
    • H04L65/40Support for services or applications
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/02Power saving arrangements
    • H04W52/0203Power saving arrangements in the radio access network or backbone network of wireless communication networks
    • H04W52/0206Power saving arrangements in the radio access network or backbone network of wireless communication networks in access points, e.g. base stations
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W52/00Power management, e.g. TPC [Transmission Power Control], power saving or power classes
    • H04W52/04TPC
    • H04W52/30TPC using constraints in the total amount of available transmission power
    • H04W52/34TPC management, i.e. sharing limited amount of power among users or channels or data types, e.g. cell loading
    • H04W52/343TPC management, i.e. sharing limited amount of power among users or channels or data types, e.g. cell loading taking into account loading or congestion level
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/04Wireless resource allocation
    • H04W72/044Wireless resource allocation based on the type of the allocated resource
    • H04W72/0473Wireless resource allocation based on the type of the allocated resource the resource being transmission power
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W72/00Local resource management
    • H04W72/20Control channels or signalling for resource management
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W36/00Hand-off or reselection arrangements
    • H04W36/16Performing reselection for specific purposes
    • H04W36/22Performing reselection for specific purposes for handling the traffic
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W88/00Devices specially adapted for wireless communication networks, e.g. terminals, base stations or access point devices
    • H04W88/08Access point devices
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02DCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES [ICT], I.E. INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES AIMING AT THE REDUCTION OF THEIR OWN ENERGY USE
    • Y02D30/00Reducing energy consumption in communication networks
    • Y02D30/70Reducing energy consumption in communication networks in wireless communication networks

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node, such as a base station.
  • An object of the present invention is to reduce the amount of energy used by a wireless network node.
  • the basic idea of the present invention is to monitor the number of active terminals served by the cell. During time periods when there are no active terminals served by the cell, downlink transmission is restricted to inter- mittent transmission of information assisting active terminals not served by the cell in finding the cell.
  • the present invention has the further advantage of reducing interference generated by the node.
  • the present invention is especially useful in cell scenarios where macro cells overlay micro cells and hence, in case of low load (no or few active cells in the micro cell area), idle terminals (in the micro cell area) can camp on the macro cells and hence use their sync symbols to be in sync with the network.
  • a radio terminal receives signals indicating a time schedule for intermittent transmission of information from a cell and synchronizes mobility measurements with the intermittent transmission of information.
  • a radio terminal performs a first cell search over a multitude of frequencies, and then, if the first cell search fails, a second cell search in which the search duration on each frequency is extended.
  • FIG. 1 is a scenario in which the present invention may be used
  • Fig. 2 is another scenario in which the present invention may be used
  • Fig. 3 is a time diagram illustrating an embodiment of discontinuous operation in accordance with the present invention
  • Fig. 4 is a flow chart illustrating an embodiment of the method of controlling energy consumption in accordance with the present invention
  • Fig. 5 is a flow chart illustrating further details of an embodiment of the method of controlling energy consumption in accordance with the present in- vention
  • Fig. 6 is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of an arrangement for controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node in accordance with the present invention
  • Fig. 7 is a time diagram illustrating synchronization of paging in a termi- nal with intermittent transmission in a base station
  • Fig. 8 is a flow chart illustrating an embodiment of a method of operating a radio terminal in accordance with one aspect of the present invention.
  • Fig. 9 is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of a radio terminal in accordance with one aspect of the present invention
  • Fig. 10 is a flow chart illustrating an embodiment of a method of operating a radio terminal in accordance with another aspect of the present invention.
  • Fig. 1 1 is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of a radio terminal in accordance with another aspect of the present invention.
  • LTE Long-Term Evolution
  • WCDMA Long-Term Evolution
  • GSM Global System for Mobile communications
  • base station also refers to more recent entities, such as NodeB and eNodeB (evolved NodeB), which are capable of handling more than one cell.
  • terminal will be used to indicate different types of radio terminals, such as mobile stations, UEs (User Equipments), laptops, etc.
  • Fig. 1 is a first scenario in which the present invention may be used.
  • adjacent radio cells RC 1 and RC2 are managed by respective base stations BSl and BS2.
  • Fig. 2 is another scenario in which the present invention may be used.
  • a micro cell managed by base station BSl lies within the coverage area of a macro cell managed by base station BS2.
  • the base stations In current cellular systems, e.g. HSPA (High-Speed Packet Access) and LTE, the base stations continuously transmit certain forms of signals in the cell. Examples of such signals are reference signals (pilots), synchronization sig- nals and the broadcast channel. These signals are used for many purposes:
  • Active terminals need to perform channel estimation, typically based on the reference signals, to receive the transmitted data.
  • the reference signals may also be used for estimation and re- porting of the downlink channel quality to support base station functions such as channel-dependent scheduling.
  • Mobility cell search Terminals regularly scan for neighboring cells. The synchronization signals transmitted in a neighboring cell are used to find and synchronize to a potential neighbor. Active terminals typically also report the received signal strength of reference signals (RSRP (Reference Signal Received Power) measurements) transmitted by the neighboring cells to the network, which takes a decision if the terminal should be handed over to the candidate cell.
  • RSRP Reference Signal Received Power
  • Initial cell search At power-up terminals try to find potential cells to connect to by scanning for synchronization signals. Once a cell is found and synchronization is obtained, the terminal reads the broadcast channel transmitted in the cell to obtain the necessary system information and performs a random access to connect to the network.
  • Terminal synchronization Idle terminals need synchronization signals and/ or reference signals (pilots) to be able to keep in sync with the network, i.e. once waking up from paging DRX (Discontinuous Reception) cycles, these signals are used to fine-tune timing and frequency errors etc.
  • paging DRX discontinuous Reception
  • the signals necessary for mobility and cell search should be intermittently transmitted. This can be accomplished by defining a DTX (Discontinuous Transmission) cycle for the base station.
  • the DTX cycle is defined such that the base station is active every T a out of T p seconds as illustrated in Fig. 3.
  • the energy reduction at the transmitter side is then approximately proportional to T a /T p .
  • T a The value of T a should be selected large enough to allow the terminal to find synchronization with sufficiently high probability as well as being able to do signal measurements on the cell. The time needed for this depends on the signal-to-noise ratio at the terminal, but if T a is in the order of a few hundred milliseconds the probability of not finding the idle cell is expected to be sufficiently low.
  • T p should be large enough to allow for efficient reduction in energy consumption. At the same time, a too large T p means that terminals may not find the idle cell. A typical value of T p could be in the order of several seconds or tens of seconds.
  • the DTX pattern in the base station is selected to match the DRX pattern configured in the terminals. If the terminals wake up according to a certain pattern to perform neighboring cell measurements, it is beneficial if the DTX pattern in the base station matches this pattern.
  • the synchronization signals are not transmitted continuously.
  • synchronization signals are transmitted in (part of) sub frame 0 and 5 in each radio frame (for FDD, for TDD the sub- frames used are different but the principle remains the same).
  • Similar rules typically apply for the broadcasted system information (in LTE, the most important part of the system information is transmitted in subframe 0 and 5).
  • the active period of the DTX pattern could still allow the base station to sleep in the remaining subframes of a radio frame, as indicated by the expanded time segment T a in the top part of Fig. 3.
  • An idle cell would exit the DTX period when it detects that a terminal, for example Tl in Fig. 1 or 2, is attempting a random access.
  • the network can also wake up idle base stations in conjunction with the handover procedure. For example base station BS2 (managing cell RC2) commanding a terminal, for example T4 in Fig. 1 or 2, to perform handover from cell RC2 to cell RCl (managed by base station BSl) would, in addition to the handover command to the terminal, also send a wake up command to base station BSl over a base station interface, for example the X2 interface in LTE.
  • Fig. 4 is a flow chart illustrating an embodiment of the method of controlling energy consumption in accordance with the present invention.
  • CTX continuous transmission
  • step Sl monitors the number of active terminals served by the cell.
  • Step S2 tests whether the number of active terminals served by the cell is less than a predetermined threshold TH. If so, step S3 hands over active terminals still served by the cell to at least one other cell (more than one cell may be required, depending on the location of the active terminals) .
  • step S4 instructs the base station managing the cell to enter a discontinuous transmission mode (DTX) in which transmission downlink in the cell is restricted to intermittent transmission of information assisting active terminals not served by the cell in finding the cell.
  • the threshold TH is set to, for example, a value representing between 0 and 5% of the maximum load the cell can handle. If the threshold TH is set to 0, step S3 may be omitted, since there are no remaining active terminals served by the cell.
  • step S3 is omitted even if there still are active terminals served by the cell.
  • the remaining active terminals are forced to initiate handovers to other cells after the cell has already entered DTX mode. Since there is a risk that some terminals may not be handed over to an- other cell, for example due to high load in these cells, the threshold TH is typically set lower in this embodiment to minimize the risk of dropped connections.
  • the threshold TH is typically set lower in this embodiment to minimize the risk of dropped connections.
  • Fig. 5 is a flow chart illustrating further details of an embodiment of the method of controlling energy consumption in accordance with the present invention.
  • step SlO the base station enters DTX mode. This corresponds to step S4 in Fig. 4.
  • Step SI l wakes the base station (for this cell) at the start of the next DTX transmission period.
  • step S 12 the base station transmits in- formation assisting terminals in finding the cell, corresponding to the first bar in the expanded upper part of Fig. 3.
  • Step S 13 detects whether there are any random access attempts from terminals. If so, step S14 instructs the base station to leave DTX mode, and to enter normal continuous mode. Otherwise step Sl 5 detects whether any handover commands have been received from neighboring base stations. If so, step S14 instructs the base station to leave
  • step S16 tests whether the time period T a has elapsed since the base station was wakened up. If not, the procedure returns to step S 12 and starts the next transmission cycle, corresponding to the next bar in the upper part of Fig. 3. Otherwise the base station goes idle (in the downlink) during the time period T p - T 0 in step S 17, and then the procedure returns to step
  • a modification of the above flowchart includes allowing the cell to exit the DTX mode not only during the active period T a but at any time. This can be accomplished by including a test for handover commands from neighboring cells and/ or random access attempts also in step S 17.
  • a base station When a base station enters DTX mode it may inform its neighbor cells of this fact. In this way the neighbor cells can decide to reject handover requests to the idle cell to reduce energy consumption in the system. In such an embodi- ment handover requests to the idle cell will be accepted only if a cell is congested or there is an apparent risk of loosing a connection.
  • Fig. 6 is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of an arrangement for controlling energy consumption of a base station in accordance with the pre- sent invention.
  • An antenna is connected to a transmitter 10 and a receiver 12, which are connected to a baseband processing unit 14.
  • a terminal activity monitor 16 is connected to baseband processing unit 14 to receive a list of active terminals served by the cell. Active terminal monitor 16 determines the length of the list, and tests whether the number of active terminals is less than the threshold TH. If terminal activity monitor 20 detects that the number of active terminals served by the cell falls below the threshold TH, then a handover command is forwarded to baseband processing unit 14. This will hand the terminals on the active terminal list over to other cells. When the list is empty, terminal activity monitor 16 indicates this in a binary terminal activity indica- tor to a transmitter controller 18, which controls a switch SW that disconnects a power supply 20 from transmitter 10.
  • the arrangement in Fig. 6 also includes a random access monitor 22, which receives preambles from terminals that attempt random accesses during DTX mode. A random access attempt indicator is forwarded to transmission controller 18, which reconnects power supply 20 to transmitter 10 when a preamble is detected. Furthermore, the arrangement in Fig. 6 includes a handover command monitor, which receives handover commands from other base stations, for example over the X2 interface, during DTX mode. A handover command indicator is for- warded to transmission controller 18, which reconnects power supply 20 to transmitter 10 when a handover request is detected.
  • the embodiment illustrated in Fig. 6 may optionally also include a DTX/ CTX indicator back to baseband processing unit 14 to switch baseband process- ing between DTX and CTX mode. In this way unnecessary baseband signal processing can be avoided during DTX mode.
  • Terminal activity monitor 16 in Fig. 6 may also be configured to restrict transmission downlink when the number of active terminals served by the cell falls below the threshold, as discussed with reference to step S3 in Fig. 4.
  • Blocks 16, 18, 22, 24 may be integrated into baseband processing unit 14, which already has this type of hardware.
  • the idle base station may transmit in DTX mode to assist a terminal in finding the cell, namely reference (pilot) signals, synchronization signals and broadcasted system information. At least one of these has to be transmitted during the time periods T a in Fig. 3.
  • reference (pilot) signals namely reference (pilot) signals, synchronization signals and broadcasted system information.
  • synchronization signals namely synchronization signals and broadcasted system information.
  • broadcasted system information At least one of these has to be transmitted during the time periods T a in Fig. 3.
  • Several procedures may be performed by the network and the terminals to facilitate the correct reception of this information:
  • An inactive terminal periodically listens to a paging channel (terminal DRX mode). Typically the terminal performs mobility measurements either just before or just after listening to the paging channel. This feature can be used to let an active non- serving base station (the terminal is inactive, so it is not served by any base station, it only listens to the paging channel) synchronize the DRX mode of the terminal with the time periods T a when the base station in intermittent mode transmits, as illustrated in Fig. 7.
  • An active terminal which can perform mobility measurements at any time, may be instructed by a base station to perform measurements at time instants that lie in time periods T a of a base station in DTX mode. This functionality can be obtained in existing terminals by a firmware update.
  • Fig. 8 and 9 illustrate an embodiment of this aspect of the present invention.
  • step S20 receives signals indicating a time schedule for intermittent transmission of information from a cell.
  • Step S21 synchronizes mobility measurements with the intermittent transmission of information. If the terminal is active, the terminal is instructed to synchronize the mobility measurements with the intermittent transmission. On the other hand, if the terminal is inac- tive, it is instead instructed to listen to the paging channel during transmission periods of the intermittent transmission. In this way the mobility measurements are indirectly synchronized with the intermittent transmissions.
  • the radio terminal illustrated in Fig. 9 includes an antenna connected to a re- ceiver 30, which forwards baseband signals to a baseband processing unit 32.
  • Baseband processing unit 32 extracts, among other signals, the DTX schedule of an idle base station. This schedule has been received from an active base station, either directly as an actual DTX schedule if the terminal is active, or indirectly as a paging schedule if the terminal is inactive.
  • the DTX schedule is forwarded to a synchronizer 34, which controls the mobility measurement schedule of the receiver 30 and baseband processing unit 32. If desirable synchronizer 34 may be integrated into unit 32.
  • the network can synchronize the DTX mode of several base stations. Both local (base station to base station) and centralized (via the Operations Support System, OSS) synchronization is possible.
  • Terminals may be provided with a two step cell search procedure. In the first step the terminal performs a normal cell search scanning over a multitude of frequencies. If this fails, the terminal performs an extended cell search in which the search duration on each frequency is extended (i.e. longer than the idle time period T p - T a of base stations in DTX mode) . This functionality can be obtained in existing terminals by a firmware update.
  • Fig. 10 and 1 1 illustrate an embodiment of this aspect of the present invention.
  • step S30 performs a first, normal cell search over a multitude of fre- quencies.
  • Step S31 tests whether the cell search failed, i.e. whether the search failed to find any cells. If so, a second cell search with an extended cell search duration on each frequency is performed in step S32. Otherwise the cell search is completed in step S33.
  • Fig. 1 1 is a block diagram of a radio terminal incorporating this two-step cell search. It includes an antenna connected to a receiver 30, which forwards baseband signals to a baseband processing unit 32, which is connected to a cell search unit 36.
  • Cell search unit 36 implements two cell search modes, namely a normal cell search mode and an extended cell search mode, and is configured to perform the cell search procedure described with reference to Fig.
  • Reference signals and synchronization signals are primarily designed for dif- ferent purposes, but during idle mode operation they could have more or less the same function. UEs that are not served by the idle eNodeB use these signals to find the cell and to measure the signal strength. Since synchronization signals are designed to be easily detected they are beneficial to use for this purpose also during eNodeB idle mode. However it would be possible to only transmit reference signals from an idle eNodeB, and with somewhat more effort the UEs would eventually find such a transmission and measure on it. It would also be possible to only transmit the synchronization signals during eNodeB idle mode operation. In that case the UE would have to estimate the signal strength based on measurements on synchronization channels. However, synchronization channels are not primarily designed for this purpose and the accuracy of such measurements would be slightly lower. Therefore the preferred operation would be to transmit both synchronization signals as well as reference signals also during eNodeB idle mode operation.
  • a UE could potentially detect such a transmission from an idle eNodeB even if synchronization signals and refer- ence signals were not transmitted, but it would result in degraded performance and longer cell search durations.
  • the broadcast channel carries the information that the UE needs in order to perform a random access, but it is possible to let the UE receive this information from a macro cell that encloses the idle cell instead.
  • all three types of signals i.e. synchronization, reference and broadcast
  • are transmitted from an eNodeB in idle mode but theoretically it is sufficient if only one of the signals are transmitted.
  • NodeB A logical node handling transmission/ reception in multiple cells

Abstract

An arrangement for controlling energy consumption of a network node associated with a cell includes a terminal activity monitor (16) configured to detect active terminals served by the cell. A transmission controller (18) is connected to the terminal activity monitor and is configured to restrict transmission downlink in the cell during time periods when there are no active terminals served by the cell. During these time periods transmission is restricted to inermittent transmission of information assisting active terminals not served by the cell in finding the cell.

Description

CONTROLLING ENERGY CONSUMPTION OF A WIRELESS
NETWORK NODE
TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates generally to controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node, such as a base station.
BACKGROUND
Energy consumption has long been an important issue for mobile terminals in cellular systems. Recent trends in green technology make it important to reduce the energy consumption also for the base stations (BS or NodeB) as the base station power consumption is a non-negligible part of the cost for the operator and excessive power consumption has a negative impact on the environment. Furthermore, the energy consumed as part of the base station operation generates heat, and active cooling (e.g. air conditioning) is typically required to control the temperature of the equipment. Active cooling will further add to the total energy consumption of a base station site. Similar comments apply to other wireless network nodes, such as relays and repeaters.
SUMMARY
An object of the present invention is to reduce the amount of energy used by a wireless network node.
This object is achieved in accordance with the attached claims.
Briefly, the basic idea of the present invention is to monitor the number of active terminals served by the cell. During time periods when there are no active terminals served by the cell, downlink transmission is restricted to inter- mittent transmission of information assisting active terminals not served by the cell in finding the cell.
In addition to reducing the energy consumption of the wireless network node, the present invention has the further advantage of reducing interference generated by the node.
The present invention is especially useful in cell scenarios where macro cells overlay micro cells and hence, in case of low load (no or few active cells in the micro cell area), idle terminals (in the micro cell area) can camp on the macro cells and hence use their sync symbols to be in sync with the network.
According to another aspect of the invention, a radio terminal receives signals indicating a time schedule for intermittent transmission of information from a cell and synchronizes mobility measurements with the intermittent transmission of information.
According to still another aspect of the invention, a radio terminal performs a first cell search over a multitude of frequencies, and then, if the first cell search fails, a second cell search in which the search duration on each frequency is extended.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention, together with further objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by making reference to the following description taken together with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 is a scenario in which the present invention may be used; Fig. 2 is another scenario in which the present invention may be used;
Fig. 3 is a time diagram illustrating an embodiment of discontinuous operation in accordance with the present invention; Fig. 4 is a flow chart illustrating an embodiment of the method of controlling energy consumption in accordance with the present invention;
Fig. 5 is a flow chart illustrating further details of an embodiment of the method of controlling energy consumption in accordance with the present in- vention;
Fig. 6 is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of an arrangement for controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node in accordance with the present invention;
Fig. 7 is a time diagram illustrating synchronization of paging in a termi- nal with intermittent transmission in a base station;
Fig. 8 is a flow chart illustrating an embodiment of a method of operating a radio terminal in accordance with one aspect of the present invention;
Fig. 9 is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of a radio terminal in accordance with one aspect of the present invention; Fig. 10 is a flow chart illustrating an embodiment of a method of operating a radio terminal in accordance with another aspect of the present invention; and
Fig. 1 1 is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of a radio terminal in accordance with another aspect of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The present invention will be described in detail with reference to an LTE (Long-Term Evolution) system. However, the same principles may also be used in other systems, such as WCDMA or GSM systems.
Furthermore, the present invention will primarily be described with reference to base stations, especially LTE base stations. However, the same principles may also be applied to other wireless network nodes, such as relays and re- peaters and home base stations. For the purposes of the present application a base station is assumed to serve one or more radio cells. Thus, "base station" also refers to more recent entities, such as NodeB and eNodeB (evolved NodeB), which are capable of handling more than one cell.
Similarly, "terminal" will be used to indicate different types of radio terminals, such as mobile stations, UEs (User Equipments), laptops, etc.
Fig. 1 is a first scenario in which the present invention may be used. In this scenario adjacent radio cells RC 1 and RC2 are managed by respective base stations BSl and BS2.
Fig. 2 is another scenario in which the present invention may be used. In this scenario a micro cell managed by base station BSl lies within the coverage area of a macro cell managed by base station BS2.
In current cellular systems, e.g. HSPA (High-Speed Packet Access) and LTE, the base stations continuously transmit certain forms of signals in the cell. Examples of such signals are reference signals (pilots), synchronization sig- nals and the broadcast channel. These signals are used for many purposes:
• Data reception: Active terminals need to perform channel estimation, typically based on the reference signals, to receive the transmitted data. The reference signals may also be used for estimation and re- porting of the downlink channel quality to support base station functions such as channel-dependent scheduling.
• Mobility cell search: Terminals regularly scan for neighboring cells. The synchronization signals transmitted in a neighboring cell are used to find and synchronize to a potential neighbor. Active terminals typically also report the received signal strength of reference signals (RSRP (Reference Signal Received Power) measurements) transmitted by the neighboring cells to the network, which takes a decision if the terminal should be handed over to the candidate cell.
• Initial cell search: At power-up terminals try to find potential cells to connect to by scanning for synchronization signals. Once a cell is found and synchronization is obtained, the terminal reads the broadcast channel transmitted in the cell to obtain the necessary system information and performs a random access to connect to the network.
• Terminal synchronization: Idle terminals need synchronization signals and/ or reference signals (pilots) to be able to keep in sync with the network, i.e. once waking up from paging DRX (Discontinuous Reception) cycles, these signals are used to fine-tune timing and frequency errors etc.
When there are active users (terminals) in a cell, the cost of transmitting the signals discussed above is justified. However, when there are no active users in the cell, as in cell RCl in Fig. 1 and 2, there is in principle no need for these signals. This is especially true in scenarios with dense deployment of NodeBs, i.e. in case where "extra" (micro) cells are placed under macro cells, as in Fig. 2. In such scenarios, the micro cells are primarily used to cope with high load scenarios, and the energy spent on transmitting these signals from the micro cells in low load scenarios is in essence wasted.
In absence of active terminals in a cell, there is in principle no need to transmit anything. This allows the base station to turn off the power amplifier as well as the baseband processing. The cell would in essence be "idle" in the downlink. As the network knows which cells the active terminals are connected to, it is possible to identify idle cells. Once a terminal, such as T4 in Fig. 1 and 2, moves into the area covered by the idle cell, the base station may wake up and resume transmission of signals. However, to determine if the cell should resume the transmission activity, it is necessary to detect if a terminal is moving into the idle cell. Such a terminal expects certain downlink signals (synchronization signals, reference signals, broadcast channels) to be present. Otherwise, it would not be able to find the cell. Similarly, if inactive terminals, such as terminals Tl , T2 in Fig. 1 and 2, become active, they must also be assisted in finding the cell.
Therefore, despite being in idle mode, the signals necessary for mobility and cell search should be intermittently transmitted. This can be accomplished by defining a DTX (Discontinuous Transmission) cycle for the base station. Typically, the DTX cycle is defined such that the base station is active every Ta out of Tp seconds as illustrated in Fig. 3. The energy reduction at the transmitter side is then approximately proportional to Ta /Tp .
The value of Ta should be selected large enough to allow the terminal to find synchronization with sufficiently high probability as well as being able to do signal measurements on the cell. The time needed for this depends on the signal-to-noise ratio at the terminal, but if Ta is in the order of a few hundred milliseconds the probability of not finding the idle cell is expected to be sufficiently low.
The value Tp should be large enough to allow for efficient reduction in energy consumption. At the same time, a too large Tp means that terminals may not find the idle cell. A typical value of Tp could be in the order of several seconds or tens of seconds.
Preferably, the DTX pattern in the base station is selected to match the DRX pattern configured in the terminals. If the terminals wake up according to a certain pattern to perform neighboring cell measurements, it is beneficial if the DTX pattern in the base station matches this pattern.
In many cellular standards the synchronization signals are not transmitted continuously. For example, in LTE synchronization signals are transmitted in (part of) sub frame 0 and 5 in each radio frame (for FDD, for TDD the sub- frames used are different but the principle remains the same). Similar rules typically apply for the broadcasted system information (in LTE, the most important part of the system information is transmitted in subframe 0 and 5). Hence, the active period of the DTX pattern could still allow the base station to sleep in the remaining subframes of a radio frame, as indicated by the expanded time segment Ta in the top part of Fig. 3.
An idle cell would exit the DTX period when it detects that a terminal, for example Tl in Fig. 1 or 2, is attempting a random access. In addition, as handover is controlled by the network by sending commands to the terminals, the network can also wake up idle base stations in conjunction with the handover procedure. For example base station BS2 (managing cell RC2) commanding a terminal, for example T4 in Fig. 1 or 2, to perform handover from cell RC2 to cell RCl (managed by base station BSl) would, in addition to the handover command to the terminal, also send a wake up command to base station BSl over a base station interface, for example the X2 interface in LTE.
Fig. 4 is a flow chart illustrating an embodiment of the method of controlling energy consumption in accordance with the present invention. In continuous transmission (CTX) mode step Sl monitors the number of active terminals served by the cell. Step S2 tests whether the number of active terminals served by the cell is less than a predetermined threshold TH. If so, step S3 hands over active terminals still served by the cell to at least one other cell (more than one cell may be required, depending on the location of the active terminals) . When the active terminals have been handed over to other cells, step S4 instructs the base station managing the cell to enter a discontinuous transmission mode (DTX) in which transmission downlink in the cell is restricted to intermittent transmission of information assisting active terminals not served by the cell in finding the cell. The threshold TH is set to, for example, a value representing between 0 and 5% of the maximum load the cell can handle. If the threshold TH is set to 0, step S3 may be omitted, since there are no remaining active terminals served by the cell.
In another embodiment step S3 is omitted even if there still are active terminals served by the cell. In this embodiment the remaining active terminals are forced to initiate handovers to other cells after the cell has already entered DTX mode. Since there is a risk that some terminals may not be handed over to an- other cell, for example due to high load in these cells, the threshold TH is typically set lower in this embodiment to minimize the risk of dropped connections. A combination of these embodiments, where the base station enters DTX mode as soon as the handover commands have been transmitted, is also possible.
Fig. 5 is a flow chart illustrating further details of an embodiment of the method of controlling energy consumption in accordance with the present invention. In step SlO the base station enters DTX mode. This corresponds to step S4 in Fig. 4. Step SI l wakes the base station (for this cell) at the start of the next DTX transmission period. In step S 12 the base station transmits in- formation assisting terminals in finding the cell, corresponding to the first bar in the expanded upper part of Fig. 3. Step S 13 detects whether there are any random access attempts from terminals. If so, step S14 instructs the base station to leave DTX mode, and to enter normal continuous mode. Otherwise step Sl 5 detects whether any handover commands have been received from neighboring base stations. If so, step S14 instructs the base station to leave
DTX mode, and to enter normal CTX mode. Otherwise the base station remains in DTX mode, and step S16 tests whether the time period Ta has elapsed since the base station was wakened up. If not, the procedure returns to step S 12 and starts the next transmission cycle, corresponding to the next bar in the upper part of Fig. 3. Otherwise the base station goes idle (in the downlink) during the time period Tp - T0 in step S 17, and then the procedure returns to step
Sl 1 to wake up the base station again. A modification of the above flowchart includes allowing the cell to exit the DTX mode not only during the active period Ta but at any time. This can be accomplished by including a test for handover commands from neighboring cells and/ or random access attempts also in step S 17.
When a base station enters DTX mode it may inform its neighbor cells of this fact. In this way the neighbor cells can decide to reject handover requests to the idle cell to reduce energy consumption in the system. In such an embodi- ment handover requests to the idle cell will be accepted only if a cell is congested or there is an apparent risk of loosing a connection.
Fig. 6 is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of an arrangement for controlling energy consumption of a base station in accordance with the pre- sent invention. An antenna is connected to a transmitter 10 and a receiver 12, which are connected to a baseband processing unit 14. A terminal activity monitor 16 is connected to baseband processing unit 14 to receive a list of active terminals served by the cell. Active terminal monitor 16 determines the length of the list, and tests whether the number of active terminals is less than the threshold TH. If terminal activity monitor 20 detects that the number of active terminals served by the cell falls below the threshold TH, then a handover command is forwarded to baseband processing unit 14. This will hand the terminals on the active terminal list over to other cells. When the list is empty, terminal activity monitor 16 indicates this in a binary terminal activity indica- tor to a transmitter controller 18, which controls a switch SW that disconnects a power supply 20 from transmitter 10.
The arrangement in Fig. 6 also includes a random access monitor 22, which receives preambles from terminals that attempt random accesses during DTX mode. A random access attempt indicator is forwarded to transmission controller 18, which reconnects power supply 20 to transmitter 10 when a preamble is detected. Furthermore, the arrangement in Fig. 6 includes a handover command monitor, which receives handover commands from other base stations, for example over the X2 interface, during DTX mode. A handover command indicator is for- warded to transmission controller 18, which reconnects power supply 20 to transmitter 10 when a handover request is detected.
The embodiment illustrated in Fig. 6 may optionally also include a DTX/ CTX indicator back to baseband processing unit 14 to switch baseband process- ing between DTX and CTX mode. In this way unnecessary baseband signal processing can be avoided during DTX mode.
Terminal activity monitor 16 in Fig. 6 may also be configured to restrict transmission downlink when the number of active terminals served by the cell falls below the threshold, as discussed with reference to step S3 in Fig. 4.
The functionality of the various blocks in Fig. 6 is typically implemented by one or several micro processors or micro/ signal processor combinations and corresponding software. Blocks 16, 18, 22, 24 may be integrated into baseband processing unit 14, which already has this type of hardware.
As noted above, there are three types of information that the idle base station may transmit in DTX mode to assist a terminal in finding the cell, namely reference (pilot) signals, synchronization signals and broadcasted system information. At least one of these has to be transmitted during the time periods Ta in Fig. 3. Several procedures may be performed by the network and the terminals to facilitate the correct reception of this information:
An inactive terminal periodically listens to a paging channel (terminal DRX mode). Typically the terminal performs mobility measurements either just before or just after listening to the paging channel. This feature can be used to let an active non- serving base station (the terminal is inactive, so it is not served by any base station, it only listens to the paging channel) synchronize the DRX mode of the terminal with the time periods Ta when the base station in intermittent mode transmits, as illustrated in Fig. 7.
An active terminal, which can perform mobility measurements at any time, may be instructed by a base station to perform measurements at time instants that lie in time periods Ta of a base station in DTX mode. This functionality can be obtained in existing terminals by a firmware update.
Fig. 8 and 9 illustrate an embodiment of this aspect of the present invention. In Fig. 8 step S20 receives signals indicating a time schedule for intermittent transmission of information from a cell. Step S21 synchronizes mobility measurements with the intermittent transmission of information. If the terminal is active, the terminal is instructed to synchronize the mobility measurements with the intermittent transmission. On the other hand, if the terminal is inac- tive, it is instead instructed to listen to the paging channel during transmission periods of the intermittent transmission. In this way the mobility measurements are indirectly synchronized with the intermittent transmissions.
The radio terminal illustrated in Fig. 9 includes an antenna connected to a re- ceiver 30, which forwards baseband signals to a baseband processing unit 32.
Baseband processing unit 32 extracts, among other signals, the DTX schedule of an idle base station. This schedule has been received from an active base station, either directly as an actual DTX schedule if the terminal is active, or indirectly as a paging schedule if the terminal is inactive. The DTX schedule is forwarded to a synchronizer 34, which controls the mobility measurement schedule of the receiver 30 and baseband processing unit 32. If desirable synchronizer 34 may be integrated into unit 32.
The network can synchronize the DTX mode of several base stations. Both local (base station to base station) and centralized (via the Operations Support System, OSS) synchronization is possible. Terminals may be provided with a two step cell search procedure. In the first step the terminal performs a normal cell search scanning over a multitude of frequencies. If this fails, the terminal performs an extended cell search in which the search duration on each frequency is extended (i.e. longer than the idle time period Tp - Ta of base stations in DTX mode) . This functionality can be obtained in existing terminals by a firmware update.
Fig. 10 and 1 1 illustrate an embodiment of this aspect of the present invention. In Fig. 10 step S30 performs a first, normal cell search over a multitude of fre- quencies. Step S31 tests whether the cell search failed, i.e. whether the search failed to find any cells. If so, a second cell search with an extended cell search duration on each frequency is performed in step S32. Otherwise the cell search is completed in step S33.
Fig. 1 1 is a block diagram of a radio terminal incorporating this two-step cell search. It includes an antenna connected to a receiver 30, which forwards baseband signals to a baseband processing unit 32, which is connected to a cell search unit 36. Cell search unit 36 implements two cell search modes, namely a normal cell search mode and an extended cell search mode, and is configured to perform the cell search procedure described with reference to Fig.
10. It outputs a list of found cells to baseband processing unit 32. If desirable unit 36 may be integrated into unit 32.
Reference signals and synchronization signals are primarily designed for dif- ferent purposes, but during idle mode operation they could have more or less the same function. UEs that are not served by the idle eNodeB use these signals to find the cell and to measure the signal strength. Since synchronization signals are designed to be easily detected they are beneficial to use for this purpose also during eNodeB idle mode. However it would be possible to only transmit reference signals from an idle eNodeB, and with somewhat more effort the UEs would eventually find such a transmission and measure on it. It would also be possible to only transmit the synchronization signals during eNodeB idle mode operation. In that case the UE would have to estimate the signal strength based on measurements on synchronization channels. However, synchronization channels are not primarily designed for this purpose and the accuracy of such measurements would be slightly lower. Therefore the preferred operation would be to transmit both synchronization signals as well as reference signals also during eNodeB idle mode operation.
Regarding the broadcast channel a UE could potentially detect such a transmission from an idle eNodeB even if synchronization signals and refer- ence signals were not transmitted, but it would result in degraded performance and longer cell search durations. Theoretically it would be possible for the UEs to determine the signal strength of an idle eNodeB based only on measurements on the broadcast channel. The broadcast channel carries the information that the UE needs in order to perform a random access, but it is possible to let the UE receive this information from a macro cell that encloses the idle cell instead. In a preferred embodiment all three types of signals (i.e. synchronization, reference and broadcast) are transmitted from an eNodeB in idle mode, but theoretically it is sufficient if only one of the signals are transmitted.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that various modifications and changes may be made to the present invention without departure from the scope thereof, which is defined by the appended claims.
ABBREVIATIONS
BS Base Station
DRX Discontinuous Reception
DTX Discontinuous Transmission eNodeB evolved NodeB
HSPA High-Speed Packet Access
LTE Long-Term Evolution
NodeB A logical node handling transmission/ reception in multiple cells
OSS Operations Support System
RSRP Reference Signal Received Power
UE User Equipment

Claims

1. A method of controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node associated with a cell, including the steps of: monitoring (Sl) the number of active terminals served by the cell; restricting (S4), during time periods when there are no active terminals served by the cell, transmission downlink in the cell to intermittent transmission of information assisting active terminals not served by the cell in finding the cell.
2. The method of claim 1, including the steps of detecting (S2) when the number of active terminals served by the cell falls below a predetermined threshold; handing over (S3) active terminals still served by the cell to at least one other cell; restricting (S4) transmission downlink when there are no more active terminals served by the cell.
3. The method of claim 1, including the step of restricting transmission downlink when the number of active terminals served by the cell falls below a predetermined threshold.
4. The method of claim 1, 2 or 3, including the steps of monitoring random access attempts (S 13) from terminals not served by the cell during intermittent transmission; leaving intermittent transmission (S 15) and returning to unrestricted continuous transmission if at least one random access attempt has been detected.
5. The method of claim 1, 2 or 3, including the steps of monitoring handover commands (S 14) during intermittent transmission; leaving intermittent transmission (S 15) and returning to unrestricted continuous transmission if at least one handover command has been detected.
6. The method of claim 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5, wherein the coverage area of the cell lies within the coverage area of another cell.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the cell is a micro cell in a macro cell.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein the base station is a home base station.
9. The method of any of the preceding claims, wherein the intermittent transmission of information includes at least one of: transmission of reference signals; transmission of synchronization signals; transmission of broadcast information.
10. The method of any of the preceding claims, including the step of synchronizing the intermittent transmission of information between several network nodes.
1 1. An arrangement for controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node associated with a cell, including: a terminal activity monitor (16) configured to detect active terminals served by the cell; a transmission controller (18) connected to the terminal activity monitor and configured to restrict, during time periods when there are no active terminals served by the cell, transmission downlink in the cell to intermittent transmission of information assisting active terminals not served by the cell in finding the cell.
12. The arrangement of claim 1 1, wherein the terminal activity monitor (16) is configured to detect when the number of active terminals served by the cell falls below a predetermined threshold; command handover of active terminals still served by the cell to at least one other cell; restrict transmission downlink when there are no more active terminals served by the cell.
13. The arrangement of claim 1 1, wherein the terminal activity monitor (16) is configured to restrict transmission downlink when the number of active termi- nals served by the cell falls below a predetermined threshold.
14. The arrangement of claim 1 1, 12 or 13, including a random access attempt monitor (22) configured to detect random access attempts from terminals not served by the cell during intermittent transmission and to instruct the trans- mission controller (18) to leave intermittent transmission and return to unrestricted normal transmission if at least one random access attempt has been detected.
15. The arrangement of claim 1 1, 12 or 13, including a handover request moni- tor (24) configured to detect handover commands during intermittent transmission and to instruct the transmission controller (18) to leave intermittent transmission and return to unrestricted normal transmission if at least one handover command has been detected.
16. A base station including an arrangement in accordance with any of the preceding claims 1 1-15.
17. A method of operating a radio terminal, including the steps of receiving (S20) signals indicating a time schedule for intermittent trans- mission of information from a cell; synchronizing (S21) mobility measurements with the intermittent transmission of information.
18. The method of claim 17, including the step of synchronizing a discontinuous reception mode of the radio terminal with the intermittent transmission of information to allow mobility measurements.
19. A radio terminal, including a synchronization unit (34) receiving signals indicating a time schedule for intermittent transmission of information from a cell, to synchronize mobility measurements with the intermittent transmission of information.
20. The radio terminal of claim 19, wherein the synchronization unit (34) is configured to synchronize a discontinuous reception mode of the radio terminal with the intermittent transmission of information to allow mobility measurements.
21. A method of operating a radio terminal, including the steps of performing a first cell search (S30) over a multitude of frequencies; performing, if the first cell search fails, a second cell search (S32) in which the search duration on each frequency is extended.
22. A radio terminal, including a cell search unit (36) configured to operate in a first mode performing a first cell search over a multitude of frequencies, and a second mode performing a second cell search, in which the search duration on each frequency is extended.
23. The radio terminal of claim 22, wherein the cell search unit (36) is configured to perform the second cell search if the first cell search fails.
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US13/148,200 US9408161B2 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node
ES09788488.6T ES2637012T3 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Control of the power consumption of a wireless network node
DK17165037T DK3206443T3 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Controlling the energy consumption of a wireless network node
EP09788488.6A EP2397006B1 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node
JP2011550088A JP5603885B2 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Control of energy consumption of wireless network nodes
RU2011137533/07A RU2535785C2 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Control of wireless communication node power consumption
HUE09788488A HUE033078T2 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node
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EP17165037.7A EP3206443B1 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node
ES17165037T ES2759599T3 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Control the power consumption of a wireless network node
EP19188081.4A EP3609246B1 (en) 2009-02-13 2009-02-13 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node
US14/700,460 US9730166B2 (en) 2009-02-13 2015-04-30 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node
US15/629,010 US10588091B2 (en) 2009-02-13 2017-06-21 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node
US16/750,228 US11265823B2 (en) 2009-02-13 2020-01-23 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node
US17/667,687 US11696238B2 (en) 2009-02-13 2022-02-09 Controlling energy consumption of a wireless network node

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